1,771,263 research outputs found

    Peay-Hammond family collection

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    The collection contains family correspondence, photographs, newspaper clippings, and documents of the Peay-Hammond family. It also consist of two family Bibles with one containing photographs of unidentified family members

    The Hammond Historical Society presents the famous 1904 edition of the Hammond Daily News ...

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    Reprint of the 1904 edition of the Hammond Daily News, edited by Silas E. Swaim.On cover: Sesquicentennial Indiana, 1816-1966.Cover title.Mode of access: Internet

    Charles Hammond photograph

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    This image is a photographic reproduction of a portrait of Charles Hammond (1779-1840). In this portrait Hammond is portrayed in the later years of his life. The intensity of his magnetic gaze belies his age. The portrait is encased in a paper frame with an oval cut-out whose lower border bears the name "Bennet & McLaren, Diamond Gallery, Marietta, O." Charles Hammond (1779-1840) was an attorney, journalist, and early Ohio political leader. He was born in Baltimore County, Maryland. When he was six years old, his father moved the family to a farm in Virginia. He attended the University of Virginia and began practicing law in Wellsburg, Virginia, in 1801. In 1803, Hammond moved to Ohio and was admitted to the Ohio bar. He became interested in the state’s political issues. Between 1813 and 1822, he was elected first to the Ohio Senate and then to the Ohio House of Representatives. His greatest interest was in judicial matters, and from 1823 to 1838 Hammond served as the reporter for the Ohio Supreme Court. During his tenure as court reporter, he published the first nine volumes of "Reports of Cases in the Supreme Court of Ohio." Hammond continued to practice law for the rest of his life. He became well known for his position defending the state in the United States Supreme Court case, Osborn v. Bank of the United States (1824). Hammond argued that Ohio had the authority to tax the National Bank of the United States because it was a business that competed with other businesses in the state. Although Ohio lost the case, Hammond was recognized as an excellent lawyer. Chief Justice John Marshall complemented Hammond's "remarkable acuteness and accuracy of mind." Hammond also had an interest in journalism. Living in St. Clairsville, he edited the Ohio Federalist from 1812 to 1818. After moving to Cincinnati in 1826, Hammond was the editor of the Cincinnati Gazette. He continued to manage the newspaper and write editorials about constitutional law until his death on April 3, 1840. William P. Bennet and Peter McLaren were the proprietors of a photography studio in Marietta, Ohio, from 1868-1873. Bennet is listed as the proprietor of Diamond Gallery from 1873-1884

    Shelley Stokes-Hammond interview, 15 September 2017

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    Shelley Stokes-Hammond is the oldest daughter of Louis Stokes. She is a graduate of The Ohio State University and Goucher College. She is a historic preservationist, author and public relations manager at Howard University. This 2017 interview was collected as part of a yearlong, community-wide commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Carl Stokes\u27 election as mayor of Cleveland

    Shelley Stokes-Hammond interview, 15 September 2017

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    Shelley Stokes-Hammond is the oldest daughter of Louis Stokes. She is a graduate of The Ohio State University and Goucher College. She is a historic preservationist, author and public relations manager at Howard University. This 2017 interview was collected as part of a yearlong, community-wide commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Carl Stokes\u27 election as mayor of Cleveland

    Australia [cartographic material] ; New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania /

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    Map of Australia showing railroads, submarine cables and overland telegraph lines. Relief shown by hachures and spot heights.; In upper margin: Atlas of the world.; Includes statistics in margins.; From: Hammond's modern atlas of the world. New York : C.S. Hammond & Co., 1905.; Prime meridian: Greenwich.; Also available in an electronic version via the internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.map-rm3793. Pg. 57. Australia. Scale [ca. 1:19,008,000]. Insets: Tasmania -- New Zealand. On verso: Pg. 58. New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania. Scale [ca. 1:6,969,600]

    Interview with Martha Hammond

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    Martha Hammond is interviewed by Lorraine Crittenden on April 27, 1986 as a part of the Western North Carolina Tomorrow Black Oral History Project. Hammond was born in 1914 in Sunburst and grew up in Swain County. She talks about the school system including attending the Cherokee Indian boarding school. Her family was poor and she started work at a very young age. Hammond talks about a flood in Bryson City and other weather events. She also shares the story of travelling by train to visit her husband who was stationed near the Ozarks

    Gary Hammond, Senior Recital, May 13, 1978

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    Concert program for Gary Hammond, Senior Recital, May 13, 197

    Dr. Michael Hammond

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    Michael Hammond speaks on the church in America for Global Engagement Chapel. Michael Hammond graduated from Taylor University in 1992, where he served as student body president. After graduation, he worked on Capitol Hill and later returned to Taylor as director of leadership development. He earned his graduate degrees at Wheaton College and the University of Arkansas. He currently serves at Southeastern University. Dr. Hammond and his wife Jennifer live with their six children in Lakeland, Florida. This summer, he will return to Taylor as the Dean of the School of Humanities, Arts, and Biblical Studies
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